An anti-blooming structure for a back-illuminated imager is disclosed. In one embodiment, the anti-blooming structure is formed in a substrate of a first conductivity type having a back side and a front side, comprising a channel region of a second conductivity type formed in the substrate; a barrier region of the first conductivity type positioned in the substrate substantially overlying the channel region and proximal to the front side of the substrate; and a drain region of the second conductivity type positioned substantially overlying the barrier region, wherein when light impinges on the back side of the substrate the light generates charge carriers that collect in the channel region, the charge carriers passing through the barrier region into the drain region when a potential corresponding to the collected charge carriers in the channel region is about equal to the potential corresponding to the barrier region. In a second embodiment, a drain region of the second conductivity type is positioned substantially extending into at least a portion of the front side of the substrate; a barrier region of the first conductivity type positioned substantially underlying about the drain region; and a channel region of the second conductivity type positioned substantially underlying and about the barrier region. The channel region, the barrier region, and the drain region are formed by ion implantation.
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1. An anti-blooming structure for a back-illuminated imager formed in a substrate of a first conductivity type having a back side and a front side, comprising:
a channel region of a second conductivity type formed in the substrate;
a barrier region of the first conductivity type positioned in the substrate substantially overlying said channel region and proximal to the front side of the substrate; and
a drain region of the second conductivity type positioned substantially overlying said barrier region,
wherein when light impinges on the back side of the substrate the light generates charge carriers that collect in the channel region, the charge carriers passing through the barrier region into the drain region when a potential corresponding to the collected charge carriers in the channel region is about equal to the potential corresponding to the barrier region;
at least one charge collecting gate at least partially overlying the drain region; and
at least one charge transfer gate at least partially overlying the drain region proximal to the at least one charge collection gate.
7. An anti-blooming structure for a back-illuminated imager formed in a substrate of a first conductivity type having a back side and a front side, comprising:
a drain region of the second conductivity type positioned substantially extending into at least a portion of the front side of the substrate;
a barrier region of the first conductivity type positioned substantially underlying and about the drain region; and
a channel region of the second conductivity type positioned substantially underlying and about the barrier region;
wherein when light impinges on the back side of the substrate the light generates charge carriers that collect in the channel region, the charge carriers passing through the barrier region into the drain region when a potential corresponding to the collected charge carriers in the channel region is about equal to the potential corresponding to the barrier region;
overlying the channel region and proximal to the drain barrier region; and
an electrical barrier region of the first conductivity type formed by ion implantation in the substrate substantially underlying the at least one charge transfer gate for diverting charge carriers away from the at least one charge transfer gate.
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11. The anti-blooming structure of
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This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional patent application No. 60/843,124 filed Sep. 8, 2006, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The field of the present invention is semiconductor device fabrication and device structure. More specifically, the present invention relates to anti-blooming structures used in back illuminated imagers.
CMOS or CCD image sensors are of interest in a wide variety of sensing and imaging applications in a wide range of fields including consumer, commercial, industrial, and space electronics. CCDs are employed either in front or back illuminated configurations. Front illuminated CCD imagers are more cost effective to manufacture than back illuminated CCD imagers such that front illuminated devices dominate the consumer imaging market. Front-illuminated imagers, however, have significant performance limitations such as low fill factor/low sensitivity. The problem of low fill factor/low sensitivity is typically due to shadowing caused by the presence of opaque metal bus lines, and absorption by an array circuitry structure formed on the front surface in the pixel region of a front-illuminated imager. Thus, the active region of a pixel is typically very small (low fill factor) in large format (high-resolution) front-illuminated imagers.
An effect called blooming can occur with CCD imagers. CCD imagers are most often constructed of a p or n type semiconductor substrate with a plurality of overlying pixel structures, wherein each pixel is comprised of a channel of a second conductivity type different from the substrate, and one or more gates overlying the channel. Light incident on the front surface of front-illuminated CCD devices, or on the back surface of back-illuminated CCD devices, cause charge carriers to form in the substrate. These charge carriers migrate to the channel regions of the pixel structures, where they collect in response to potentials applied to one or more gates associated with the pixel structure. As charge accumulates, the channel well under a collecting gate begins to “fill” or approach a saturation state. The charge stored in the channel is sometimes said to be stored in the “charge well” located underneath the gate overlying the semiconductor substrate. Bright sources of light can cause so many carriers to be generated in the channel region that the charge-holding capacity of a pixel can be exceeded. As a light-gathering capacity of a pixel channel is exceeded, the excess charge carriers spill over into adjacent pixels. This spillover, called “blooming.”
Referring now to
Charges generated in a backside 15 of the substrate 4 are confined in the channel 6 by an application of appropriate potentials to the gates 13. Initially, when there is no accumulated charge in the channel region 6, the channel potential 16 in
As can be seen in
A cross-section of a front-illuminated imager in the prior art with anti-blooming structures moved away from the imaging-component upper-portions of a silicon substrate is shown in
Light impinging on the front side 38 of the pixel 22 creates charge carriers which migrate to the channel region 30. The charge carriers are located in the channel region 30 because the pixel isolation region 32 provides an electrical barrier to the charge carriers stored in the channel region 30. In a similar fashion, the barrier region 28 initially provides an electrical barrier to the charge carriers confined in the channel region 30. However, as charge carriers accumulate in the channel region 30, channel potential collapses, and an instant in time is reached when the channel potential is level with the barrier potential. From that point onwards, any further accumulated carriers will overcome the barrier potential, and move to the drain region 26. The excess charge carriers in the drain region 26 are collected as a drain current through the drain contact 36.
Unfortunately, this structure is of no use for a back-illuminated CCD imager. Using the front-illuminated imager structure of
Accordingly, what would be desirable, but has not yet been provided, is an anti-blooming structure for use in back illuminated imager array which does not share valuable front-side real estate with carrier-collecting drain regions.
Disclosed is an anti-blooming structure for a back-illuminated imager formed in a substrate of a first conductivity type having a back side and a front side, comprising a channel region of a second conductivity type formed in the substrate; a barrier region of the first conductivity type positioned in the substrate substantially overlying said channel region and proximal to the front side of the substrate; and a drain region of the second conductivity type positioned substantially overlying the barrier region, wherein when light impinges on the back side of the substrate the light generates charge carriers that collect in the channel region, the charge carriers passing through the barrier region into the drain region when a potential corresponding to the collected charge carriers in the channel region is about equal to the potential corresponding to the barrier region.
In a second embodiment, an anti-blooming structure for a back-illuminated imager formed in a substrate of a first conductivity type having a back side and a front side comprises a drain region of the second conductivity type positioned substantially extending into at least a portion of the front side of the substrate; a barrier region of the first conductivity type positioned substantially underlying and about the drain region; and a channel region of the second conductivity type positioned substantially underlying and about the barrier region; wherein when light impinges on the back side of the substrate the light generates charge carriers that collect in the channel region, the charge carriers passing through the barrier region into the drain region when a potential corresponding to the collected charge carriers in the channel region is about equal to the potential corresponding to the barrier region. The channel region, the barrier region, and the drain region are formed by ion implantation.
The first type of anti-blooming structure can be used in frame transfer CCD array structures, wherein the channel region, barrier region, and drain region extent substantially overlying the entire imaging store area and the frame storage area. The boundary between the imaging store area and the frame storage area comprise a plurality of charge collecting gates/regions separated by inter gate dielectrics from a plurality of charge transfer gates/regions. In order to prevent smear, charge carriers generated in the substrate can be diverted away from charge transfer gates by ion implanting an electrical barrier region of the first conductivity type in the semiconductor substrate substantially underlying the charge transfer gates. The electrical barrier region can underlay the transfer gates in the substrate for the entire frame storage area.
The second type of anti-blooming gain structure can be used in line transfer CCD array structures, wherein the channel region overlies the entire substrate, but the drain barriers and drain regions are formed separately in each charge collecting region pixel. As with frame transfer CCD array structures, in line transfer CCD array structures, charge carriers generated in the substrate can be diverted away from charge transfer gates by ion implanting an electrical barrier region of the first conductivity type in the semiconductor substrate substantially underlying the charge transfer gates.
The following embodiments are intended as exemplary, and not limiting. In keeping with common practice, figures, are not necessarily drawn to scale.
A cross section of an anti-blooming drain structure incorporated into a back-illuminated imager structure (e.g. CCD or CMOS), constructed in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention is depicted in
Light impinging on the back side 56 of the imager structure 50 creates charge carrier which migrate to the channel region 62. The charges are accumulate in the channel region 62 because the barrier region 60 initially provides an electrical barrier to the charges confined in the channel region 62. Initially, when there is no accumulated charge in the channel region 62, the channel potential 64 in
One of the concerns in implementing such anti-blooming structures in back illuminated devices is the collection of charge in undesirable areas. Typically in any CCD imager architecture, a CCD imager comprises one or more charge-sensing regions where photo-generated charge carriers will be collected, and a charge transfer region where charge packets will be moved to output amplifier circuits. In the back-illuminated CCD imager devices, since light can fall on the entire back surface of the device, charge carriers can be generated anywhere in the bulk semiconductor substrate. However, these carriers should end up only in the charge collection region. Charges should be prevented from entering into charge transfer regions under transfer gates. Otherwise, photo generated carriers accumulating under the charge transfer gates will ultimately contribute heavy noise to the resulting image, which is referred to as the phenomenon called smear.
In the present invention as depicted in
As with the frame transfer CCD imager structure 82 of
It is to be understood that the exemplary embodiments are merely illustrative of the invention and that many variations of the above-described embodiments may be devised by one skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the invention. It is therefore intended that all such variations be included within the scope of the following claims and their equivalents.
Swain, Pradyumna Kumar, Bhaskaran, Mahalingam
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